Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 4 April 1930 — Page 3
SMTOR TYWHGS STim liALLMltS IN DRY LAW IlLl
Democrat, Goaded by iJrookliart, lieiies ueieat at Foils Katner man be Mypdcnte.
BIG EXPLOSION IN !HOUSE MEASURE
FIREWORKS PLANT KELLS 10 PERSONS
FOB UNIVERSAL DRAFT PASS)
FRIDAY, AFRIT; I, 1930.
Washington, April ,—Wan t it of deieaL Lor ^ns attacks on tOv dry iav,, tjeuator Tyumga tiieniotrai, Maryland) was appmtided rnuiusiasticaliy irom the galleries in the benate Tuesday as he snouted he AyoiiiU coat aue "to tight a -cause wiiiCii'is supply dragging the United btac. s ana ail its traditions tmd IHiiiosoimy down into the mire oi dilate and corruption and i.vf.oc-
risy.”
'rne Mary land wet was replying to benator iarooknart tKepaoucan, Iowa) a ary, who nnd warnea 'l yclings that his former colleague, bt hator iimce Luemocrat, Maryland) had been Vo tired to private life at (he last election alter malting wet speeches. “If i can pay that price to louder some slight service to my coiuiiry,” Tyamgs declared, “at least I will not be running with the crowd just to get're-elected.’' Tyciings Presents Charts The Maryland wet and th Iowa dry had com exchanging i:..,'htod i einarks ‘ for more tnan an im.ftr in Cue first proh .bition debate in the ■ benate in Weeks, alter Tydings uu-dercook-—is ith displays of a series ot ciiaHs bearing tables of'statistics —to drive sV.nat he termed “tile bunk” out of prcdiibition. The demonstration irom tln> galleries startled the meagre monibersntp on the tiodr; ended the ne\cK.iii>g oy UrooiUiart and brought a warning front the^ presiding <uiicer tiial any otner suchanr. break would result in ,Ae clearing of the galler-
i&s. .
Challenging the Tydtngs figures on the enect of the prohibition law, benator UrooKhurt contended that suitisiics' snow'iiig increase., in drunkenness were faulty o ecu use t.uy included figures for cities \vh ,ch were dfy hetore national prohibition vent into effect. He sa l Luc many tables'"of data merely indicated a • failure to enforce tne dry law.” 'benator T;. dings based nil estimate on wine drinking on neplii ivdsea at lount ot grace production aoo ,3 normal neeus but benator 1, rook hart argueu th.turs e.-..rean-ed production was in to grape
juice.
Philadelphia, Pa., April .— (UP) Jeuply identification was ail but im—Stored fireworks, designed for j possible. The first victim to be holiday celebrations, tverd touched | identified»was Victor Antonio, 65,
off prematurely today and the re^; an employe.
sultant explosions rocked a large ; students' of the Vailey Forge Milarea in New Jersey and Pennsyl- itarv Academy were called out to
vania, bringing d^ath and destruc-
tion.
At least 10 persons, including two women, were killed.
render aid and establish fire / lines. • The all-consuming forde of the blasts was evidenced not only by tile macabre condition of the dead
MABiSOfSMli
City Will Not Take Part Enforcement; Alderman Loses His Job.
They were employes of the Penn but by the following scenes as deFirewbrks Company, near Devon, [scribed b> eye-witnesses:
Pa. The number of injured was j Men ami women, running in fear, estimated at SO, although disrupted j were sent spinning head over heels, communications made it difficult to j ( Two railway signal tower men, bait ascertain the exact figure. a mile from the explosion scene,
The first explosions occured were stunned and the tower itself shortly after 10 a. in., in the een-jwas badly damaged,
ter of the plant when the buildings | Rooftops were lifted from houses used to hpuse-aerial bombs trem- |in the vicinity and; thick-plankVd bled and shot skyward with a ter-[sheds in the plant itself splintered
rifle detonation. [as though of matchwood.
A moving train was rocked al-
most from the tracks’
Fire followed the collapse of the bomb 'storage building and spread to the two-;- ore sheds aiur factories of the ranfbling plant. At least
three other blasts resulted.
The 10 bodies recovered by noon
of the store, yesterday ad-, to police that they had plan-
ned the robbery as a means of obLaining payment'of a $13,000 policy from (he Casualty Surety 'Company
of .New York.
Abe Poncher. also arrested here ^ has confessed that he played a part | n the conspiracy by bringing into intact the local jewelers ami
, T _ K-re'yer Btfgim, Chicago criminal of feenate Now Receives Propoa-jieng staimmg, who engineered the
4*
al Aimed as Measure
Against War.
The blast was heard 30 miles away in Trenton, N. J. A local Pennsylvania railroad passenger train was speeding through Devon at the time and the coach .windows cracked from the concussion. Railroad service then was suspended
temporarily.
i d ,lit of the bodies recovered | were taken from the scene of the wcio removed to the morgue of U. i first explosion. It was believed G. Mauger, Malvern undertaker, (other workers might have lost'tneir The bodies were so mutilated that j lives ill the other buildings. WORKHAS STARTED IN TAKING CENSUS
Washington, April —A resolution to provide for a commission to study the problem of university draft of the nation’s resources in war times was adopted Tuesday by the House. It now goes to the
Senate.
T r he commission will lie composed of five representatives, four senators, the secretaries of war, navy, commerce, agriculture ami labor and the attorney general. It will consider “methods of equalizing the burdens and removing the profits of war. if found feasible, the commission would recommend in its report to Congress a constitutional amendment to permit conscription of capital. ■ ji Denounced to Alabaman. The measure was bitterly denounced by Representative Huddleston (Democrat, Albania,,) as
fake holdup.
Others under arrest at this time are John Meleski and Marthi Tesmer, held in jail at Chicago, who have admitted they‘were the two who actually staged the fake holdup, and Pogue, taken into custody at Chicago yesterday morning. DECLARE CRM ■ £C-®p£RAIi¥ES PROVING WORTH
In the Declaration of Independence Thomas Jefferson asserts that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. That is a doctrine that we seem prone to forget in these days.
in no mood for such foolishness, after having wrested their liberty from the crazy monarch of England, George the Third, he bent his efforts toward getting all power into the feands of as few people as pos-
when it is so commonly thought | sible. These favored few, bf course,
that our government derives its authority from the consent of the financial interests. That men have the right to attend to their own
were the possessors of the country’s wealth. By the historians Hamilton has been called a great Secretary of the Treasury. His dis-
business and look after their own tinction is due to the governmental
Washington, 'April -(UP)—j tor, Steuart advised. “There
C en .! have been instances of people i claiming to be census-takers in or-
Phe big count begins today.
suy bureau agents have started ; der to cpl]ect information for Viout on the , long trail which vvnljyate purposes, or to gain admisison take them, pad and pencil in hand, [to home? for purposes of robbery.” to the doorsteps of some 30,000,000 ( Steuart asked the public to meet homes. jthe enumerator courteously and anTheiv task is to gather data for iwer question? promptly; also to the 15th American decennial yen-,give the best possible estimate for sus/an enumeration which will pro- [any questions one cannot 'answer Hde the first authentic population ; exactly, and to fill out promptly "Gunt in 10 years and the first [any individual . or family blanks ivailable chart of the course'coih-'left by the eriumerator who may modifies • take from raw materials jhawe called in one’s absence, o the home. / Several innovations appear in President Hoover was among the ; this year’s census questions. Evfirst to be (|uesHoned: He lias an- eryone will be anked whether he is nounced that he, as “the head of,employed and whether he rents or
the family,” will answer questions [owns his home,
tbout the White House family’s! Enumerators will visit more ages, real estate, ^condition of em-.than 6.500,000 farms seeking agridovment and radio. ' euRdfal data. They will ; iso coi-
tion of property and labor tor war. He said it was. the “most flag ran l attack ever made on the floor of the House on private properlv
rights.”
Asserting labor was against the resolution, he charged the real purpose was to enable drafting ot iabor for service in private indus-
Officet's RevieW Advance ^Towards Market Control of Prices.
Chicago, April 2. The Farmers’ Nalional Grain corporation gqvern-ment-sppn sored co-operative isUsed a call today for the first an-
the opening wedge for conscrip- m ial meeting of stockholders at 1 imi nr nvnr.prf v nmrl 1 m hnv tnv* w: > r —a. m -t
try and -for private profit. The ketiug
Chicago next Tuesday.
Election of the board of directors will be the principal business. Twenty-two grain co-operatives were declared eligible to participate upon the closing of the books March' 25. The roster shows “tremendous strides in the centralization of ths'co-operalive grain.mar-
affairs ought to go without sayng. But such is not the case. The prico of liberty is eternal vigilance. The rights of the people have been obtained and preserved only by a long and continuous fight. When-
ever the people grow weary of
that we like to think it is, especially when the juries have been parsed as has been the case no furtner away than Delaware County, Indi-
ana, hi years past.
Many of the states, including our own, have copied this bill of rights in various forms into their respec-
tive constitutions.
When the national government was established, Washington having been unanimously chosen President, but Jefferson and Hamilton were invited into the cabinet, and the terrible struggle for supremacy began. The plutocrats, with Hamilton at their bead, circulated every kind of malicious report and scandal about the people’s great leader. Every tale that human ingenuity or devilish imagination could invent was circulated to defame Jefferson, but to no avail. Washington served two terms as President and
movement,” officers said.
AJabamair succeeded in getting throhgh an amendment to forbid the commission from considering conscription of labor in its studies!
Several for Adoption.
Representatives , Waiuwright,
•III
Madison; W-is., April .—(UP)— A proposal that Madison take part in prohibition enforcement was b111 led in defeat and the author of 'the idea was voted out of his job as alderman, returns front yesterday’s election showed today. The municipal dry,law sponsored by AldernRm George Gill was voted down 8.108 to 5,738. Gill lost out in his ward’s aldermanic race to John L. Bourke by almost two to one. Only four out of the city’s 22 precincts gave majorities ■ in favor of the ordinance which was designed to replace locally the state dry prohibition enforcement law which tiie legislature repealed last year. At the time a vote on the repeal was taken jV^adison registered a majority of 1,000 in its favor and when (Jill recently sought to iuduce the city coupcil to pass-his municipal ordinance that body declined to take action until the voters again bad an opportunity to register their opinions.
BOY SCOUTS GET CIVIL LtSSOffl
ai s.■ April ramuigh, Ea/?1 Indianapoli', hive of the st; y while of;
ed as mayor, ebh f of tiie fire dcpi i : aster, as a part of
me
jr
Ik
the
Indiana:
Robert ('a Troop 6!), < hief oxer hour lot). Scouts uri police, r^ii ami poslr
Civic Duv observance.
. ■ : i: 11 t'
Co'v. Harry G. Leslie by RoSs Rissler, Eagle Scout, who held th-., posiCivic Day is a part of the annual remit week program .-.pmisoix d by the Indianapolis boy s'-ouf < ..aicii during the .springwacalvioii ct Hie 'i !n tempi rai'y ao\ ;<<r •!. tne state charter board while it considered the petition presented by a delegation of 50 pet.sons asking for a new bank at Royal Center, Cass
.county.
DEBATE CONSTITUTION.
Director William M. j
leet data
New York, and Royal C. Johnson, o' 1 aiu’. aC.ons, but
South Dakota, Republicans, ’ and McSwain (Democrat, South Carolina), ail of whom have sponsored similar legislation in the paki,
urged adoption.
Representative F. H. LuGuur.tiu (Repu’iiiiuin, New York) assailed Ihe measure,, charged it was a
mere gesture and tiial it had imo-1 id Ami rican legionnaires, but flad not deceived American labor.
,—o—— ' I
Closer Union Noticed “The progress of the corporation,’ they said, “indicates not only a long step forward by grab- producers toward eonlplste control of grain marketing through their own
also a . closer
knitting togeihqy of the tarm organization intends of ther country than liermofore has been regarded
possible.
“Both of these cev icpnumts may .• .11 justify the grain producers of die United Stales in the belief Bail »heir nuukciiug problems-are ell on their way toviard sclutiou.”
assumption of the state debts and lus debt-funding system, employing methods by which his cronies and moneyed friends became immensely wealthy at the expense of the poor, holders of the colonial scrip-
That many hundreds, even thous-j dediued a third term. The election
watching and lax in maintaining J alKls - of Revolutionary soldiers, resulted _ in the choice of John their rights, these rights have been wer< v ™ined by such tactics meant [Adams, he having defeated Jefteisnatched away from them by the nothing in namilton ’ s y° un § life -l son b , y , th v ree votes ' But . Adgms alert fingers of the professional And to ° of ten Hamilton’s political Proved to be a very unpopular chiet politicians acting as chore bovs for 1 offspring have been in‘charge of executive, and at the end ot his dlk ■“«<>»•» »*»*«• l‘ OTm was elected by a last state leeislature umlor mn- At the time our national Constitu- ! ^arge majority, and the peoples ' U ie ’ ’ , n< . P1 011 [tion was formed Jefferson was ab- ' drst battle was won. The rights wij eyes, declared by their act 10 ^ t . ab ronnea jenerson was ar> •ichipvpd -niri iitpr viftmil" dates toi gofeniOT S< aid eir uimed lthough Madls011 . H' 6 I'™"'! “" d 0Illy by ti, ° ulm05t vigilam-e and t - c * i ei ? nCl - , nited t |j sc j n j e 0 -f Jefferson made a eallant tb e unceasing efforts of the friends o ft?, .w f r ’ an i th,S r ^ ht . was fight the HamXni™n nartf sue- pi- liberty. Some of these things will o the ‘ i>mfcsvf™ ■ i 1 10 nolbbtin’ V Tt ceeded in getting too many of their (be recounted in other articles, seems to me Sat tile Jeople SDel- theories into the original docu-j DALLAS WILLIAMS,
aware County ought to look up the raent - Some of the states ’ however, record of their representatives 1,eflised to ratif y until, further guarboth of whom are asking for an- anties wdre granted the people, and other term. James Russell Lowell this resulted in the passing of the says. “They have rights who dare first ten amendments, fathered by maintain thehi ” \ Jefferson. These ten amendments
That the plain people had any are commonly known as the Bill
rights at all in the beginning of our Rights. The fiist of these Pronational history we owe to the vig- bibits the establishment of a state orous battles waged in their behalf r 4 igion ’ guarantees the free exerbv Tliqmas Jefferson. He fought c ^ se religions worship, and prothe people’s battles, and after a llibit s the abridgment of the freeturbulent warfare of a dozen years d °m of speech and of the press. So achieved a profound victorv. His ^ doubtless due, in part at least, efforts have been minimized by t0 Thomas Jefferson, that the Post-
Democrat is able to function at i „ ^ ^,
present. The enemies of free speech' a Sl - a tes should read an under-
Seek Uniformity In Extradition
i
Indianapolis,- April 4.—(UP)— Uniformity of procedure in extradf tion cases is sought by Gov. Harrs G. Leslie in a recommendation that this topic be given a high place
V ' ~ •' it is doubtless due in nart at least among discussions ot the next gov-
by io ^hoTafjeVeSrtffthl pLt- , „
many ® historians, most of whom DemocVat is able to function at I Leslie believes that the got ernoi s
have come from the capitalistic mesent. t ne enemies ot tree speecn; _ , ti f ,, plattp ,. s that class- or have written under and a free press (the capitalistic [ s ^ nd mg reiat veto all matteis that
class or have written under such
. , ... , wTn Qiovt VeleurtTiiHhoao'follow similar courses in their ac1 ord Rhodes was a brother-in-law been on the alert to .cmtail these j — .. .x.-x-... -
influence. For example,' James class and their flunkies) have ever(
Mark Hanna, and cherished the censtltuttonal guaranties and have L tloas , 0 b b etltlo u s ; He expresseci be-
GiM ROBBERY AT ELKHART A FAKE
•oi ppratlon
the incotp s gelcicted
lartrn co-' i
Tuesday
over oi it
i liming
iu.-„dal stockboldei s.
has been nianiratipg board oi l;y' delegates oi :■-rauves. Tue \ ill mark tire i affairs to the
jlief, however, that extradition matIters should be taken entirely from to [ the hands of governors and \placed,
i eral.
same sentiments as that rapacious IP some P ar t succeeded,
plutocrat and plunderer. But in re- Other articles guarantee to the
cent years Jefferson has been com- P e °i )1 - e Lie right to keep and to. t t at x m . n o P11 ing more and more into his own, bear arms; prohibit the quartering' ^ ead ’ Wlt b state attoyieys genam! within the last, decade a half- of soldiers in private houses; .pro-1 ^ (> . nvovllovs . f . nnfprpnf . p will hp izcn new Mo-fachies have' been tet R the people against unreason- , • he „overnois conference will he
^ aml *•*« at salt Lak0 Clty ' utah ' m Iu >, 1 t. s cused persons the right to speedy;
‘ Jefferson’s- chief opponent was L'ials and preserve the right of trial nf the Ule'-ander Hamilton brilliant but by jury; prohibit excessive bail or J ne dead letter division ot the unscrupulous. HamiRon believed in ftnes - aTld cniel' and unusual punish- Pf^fttce in Washington has an r sir-urn- central government In ment; and. finally, delegate to the arsenal ad its own. Many weapons fact, he"at first wished to have a ^ates their respective rights. Per- are received in mail that has gone king ruling over America. But see- haps the right of trial by jury is astray One loaded revolver was ing that the American people were n °t always the unmixed blessing cocked, arranged to explode as the
! box was opened.
be National Broadcasting network ucss mstuuuons.
’ast night; heralding the coming'of j» The 'census of distribution alone - he census enumerators and warn-1 involves a cam dss of nearly'8,000,etl householders to beware of ifh-'jooo establishments. In addition posters. Do not liesitatq for a,some 14,-000 -mines and quarries minute to ask the census-taker to will be visited, as will more than ■how his credentials if you suspem 100,000 irrigation and drainage pro-
that he is not a bona fide enumerm i jects.
PARLEY MAY FAVOR ' ” ■ .0 .. s ,
\
London, April —(UP)—Dele- /,t-op:e of British naval support in
gates of the five world powers eon iinued their negotiations today confident that the turning point in the London^ naval conference had lieen passed, and the, obstacles .yliicb have threatened to wreck ihe hopes of the parley from its . pry begim* ug ;u now overcome Acceptance, with certain reservations, by the Japanese government of tee American ami Brvish proposals of naval tonnage ratios, French ((pmand for a security'pact, brought the greatest single (Jay's progress since January. ^ In an attempt to find a formula which would convince the French ui(| jo uoi(U[os A'dduq u |i: oai.i.h o) jiioqu o.ioay qouo.iq pun qsi)i.i* c . oqj jnti) suoijeoipui qjiAY .ioi(ioho,
he event of a crisis, and fit the ;ame time net alqrm the British >y any commitments to military iction, the FrancoBritish diplomats turned to “Annex F” of the Locarto treaties for a basis of a new' igreepient. Annex F contains an interpretaion. of the disputed Article XVI of he League of Nations covenant, mder which England, Fraiice, Italy, Czechoslovakia and Belgian agree hSt “members of the League are lOiind to cooperate loyally find efeetively in support of the covenuil and in resistance to ail acts oi i,"-‘iessiou, in a manner compatible with their military situation, and aking iifto account theiUgeographcal ’position.”
FILM SHOWS FAMOUS
Tim iar ,o ■ :i support mg Ba-rib
MONTE CARLO CASINO lelrness inciudes .Viiklred Van Dorn, [Dorothy Matthews,, Eu Aiyn War'on of the Gods,” With Dickjren, Frank /Albertson, • Barbai Sarthclmess, Has Scenes ' ia pnard, Geneva Mitchell, Jimmy Laid There j Eagle, King ! loti (.'hang and \nde.v;
•*— J'Handolf. It was directed by Frank Lloyd.
RiqhmUnd, 1ml.(LiI 1 ) Albert Si limp and Georgh W. Barnard, >Jadidnapolis attorneys, will debate ' the issue of a new cbns.fitufion for Indiana here April 0 before* an audience of members of Lie Kieumond Rotary, Liiiiis, hiUanis and Exchange clubs. Attendance of 250
has been pfedieted.
The celebrated gambling halls of Monte Carlo have been reproduce'' with fide 11 v for “Son of the. Gptls” tliq First" National-Vitaphone production which has been adapted for the talking screen from Rex Beach’s famous novel of the same name. ‘Son ‘of the Gods” willjiave its first local showing at the Rivol'l Theatre at a pre-view showing..Sat-1
urday night-at eleven-thirty o’clock, I CentcrviHe, Missouri, First In with' RicilH 1 Ban he I m-m in Gc | corporiltet! ("ity to Make
} by a hifg' I a jruij Ufcportu
FIRST RHURItS OF CIKSUS REPORTED
Owners of Jewelry, Store iriatk for
As a person becomes mi.lu e-
ia- ■ L the lenses of the eyes tee.id to harden, and focussing v itlm.i.
f gla.s Hci become flit .'limit.
4 '‘ ’ 'tiie olue - watches known louay
'froUk**----*ut. 1050. hut. it is;^e
licvcS that AYatches were hiveme.i
s..me li. v ■ i'-jars beiore t .al. .
IfNJM #I S 1®#MTIJNITY
Fikhart led., April 3. - That the robbery of Wright’s jevvelry^yicre here on Jan. 27, By tvto ipposed trmed robbers was a “frann 1 job” ‘lirough vftiich the ownt rs of 11 c es Lablishineiit hopedlo collect a $1.5,JJil robbery insurfitice policy, was dablishe'd by pqlfi-e yesterday vith the arrest of six cf the eight me i alleged to imve,been the m;ouipivators. ■ Full- confessions had tain d this afternoon from f.hqse umler^ arrest. In addition to Mm deariii the local loldx'ry. it is anti that numerous other robber or rylarlos will be solved ibid apprehension of the rhq After Insurhrce Mone -Fred Wic off and" I’hefii]
mcie Knows ar.d Muncie Goes
M lSi A f:i gmsmj
iirrn
leading r
capable cast of supporting playe
Manager ‘‘Boc” Arlington has ar-j
ranged to present the first one I
hundred ladies attending this pro-1 Washington, A[>ril (d.l’) — view showing a beautiful souvenir('Flrsl returns Irom a fe>v small di> •booklot of “Son of the Gocls M . Tim i'riets flowed into the ceil/us buregular pfcry dates of this all talk-1’eau today as Mm government con-
ing production with many of the
scenes in n.atura,l color will be Mon-, day, Tuesday and Wednesday.
All the details are
from the crystal chandeliers to the promenade and gallery leading to the rear of the Casino ufid to the terrace from which many suicides have leaped to the raiirdaiUbeioW-— ruined by the fickle goddess For-
tune.
The Monte'Carlo scene? of “Sen of the Gods” are also interesting
Cotton is replacing no;, er a | )CCHllse they introduce Constance chief crop ol tiie i bangi*Suan te ! Bennett ‘who plays the feniinim gion ol l renldi equatorial AMiea. i eat j (rpposjte Bartlielmess. II i: It is similar to the cotton grown, that Miss Benneft as Alaivni iu tiie Belgian Congo and is as-[meets Bartlielmess in the role o’
Melody Lane In a Rural Comedy ' wThe Nagging Wife' All Talking Picture m| “The Gliniax”
With Jean Hersholt and Kathryn Crawford \
superior to. the Amer-i-gam Let an Amencau- bth ■a.. j d pifhlic cooperation with the census
Timed- its national search for facts. Centerville, the exact geographic mi-iter of Missouri, claimed t/> be
authentic. ! -he first incorporated city com-
hlel/ly enumerated and reported, Xootanai edmity, Idaho', wired the mreau it completed Its census enumeration at 9:30 a. m., yesterday. While enumerators were, busy in >)her cities, J. .Sterling ,Moran-, :onsus superviser for the District! >f Columbia, took a census of the Vhite House family yeterday. President Hooker had answered
be questions in advance and gave,u, lie filled-ouf questioirnaire to Mo-|| ■an wlieif he arrived. Mr. Hoove !g used, the, occasion tb appeal for ill
Next Wed., Thurs., Fri. and Saturday MELOIJY LANE In the Immortal Drama ‘Uncle Tom’s / Cafeih” All Talking, Pisture “Broadway' ■ Hoofer” ' {
With ,
Marie Saxon Jack Egan Louise Fast
iif lo
in the belief that he is a Ciunfimau. bureau.
m
M'Qiliy Mackall With more Pep than Evgr before, moiy Lauglia, than “Hard To Get. d & ' “Slrsdly Modern” Also 3-Acts-3 | - RvK.O. (VAUDEVILLE Monday, T uesdny, Wednesday ' Richard Barthelmess
In
“Son of the Gods” Think of r II the great Slarth-j elmess hits of the past. Then try to vision a drama hotter than h ! s best? It’s his greattest achievement. Your great ALL TALKING 'Ccenes i n NATURAL COLOR IW»*f»maE23BBJB8SU T Thursday, Friday, N- '' Saturday Rudy Vallec The idol pf millions, comes] 'to the screen in his first great] feature picture. |: “The Vagabond Lover”' Ail Talking, Ringing 'nwinm -w.*tbsbS ’■
A Eleetrie Mange PesigMed for iiae Average Family T TERE iu an opportunity that have never Deforj been able to offer— ri a high quality Electric range for a very low investment. The Marion Electric Range, Model 55, fits compactly into a limited space but it is large enough to meet the -requirement? cf the usual family. It has a full size oven with broiling and baking units, automatically controlled so that when the meal is f.v> the oven 3 r ou may forget it until dinner time. The best of materials are used throughout in the construction of this semi-white range—porcelain enamel cooking top—splasher and oven over Armco Ingot Iron —Diamond “H” switches al! combine to make it an outstanaing piece of equipment which any housewife would be proud to own. The first cost is low and under our attractive cocking rates it i? surprisingly economical to operate. For only $10 down—the balance on easy monthly installments, we will install this range complete and ready to use. Have Our Salesman to Tell You About the New Iljgh SpeeS “Fury” Element Indiana General Service Company 117 N. Mulberry Street \
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